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ÉCOLE NORMALE SUPéRIEURE


The 'École normale supérieure' (also known as 'Normale Sup'', 'Normale', 'ENS', 'ENS-Paris', 'ENS-Ulm' or 'Ulm') is a prestigious French ''grande école'', possibly the most prestigious. This establishment of higher education, with small attendance, focuses on training future academics in a variety of fields.
Its main campus is located around the ''rue d'Ulm'' (Ulm Street, the main building being at 45, rue d'Ulm) in the 5th arrondissement of Paris. The ENS has annex campuses on Boulevard Jourdan (, in Paris) and in Montrouge (a suburb; ), as well as a biology annex in the countryside at Foljuif.
Three other "écoles normales supérieures" have been established: the École Normale Supérieure de Lyon (sciences); the École Normale Supérieure Lettres et Sciences Humaines (humanities) in Lyon; the École Normale Supérieure de Cachan (pure and applied sciences, sociology, economics and management, English language) in Cachan. They make up the infomal ENS-group. For this reason the ENS in Paris is often called 'ENS-Paris' or 'ENS-Ulm'.

Contents
Overview
Influence abroad
Free online content
Notable alumni
Notable professors
See also
External links
References

Overview


The quadrangle at the main ENS building on rue d'Ulm is known as the ''Cour aux Ernests'' – the Ernests being the goldfish in the pond.

Originally meant to train high school teachers through the ''agrégation'', it is now an institution training researchers, professors, high-level civil servants, as well as business and political leaders. It focuses on the association of training and research, with an emphasis on freedom of curriculum.
Its alumni include eight laureates of the Fields Medal (all French holders of the Fields medal were educated at the École Normale Supérieure), which is the equivalent of the Nobel Prize for the mathematical sciences, as well as Nobel Prize winners in both science and literature.
As in many other ''grandes écoles'', the ENS mostly enrolls its students two or three years after high school. The majority of them come from ''prépas'' (preparatory classes, see grandes écoles) and have to pass France's most selective competitive exams. Studies at ENS last four years. Many devote the third year to the agrégation which allows them to teach in high schools or universities. ENS-Ulm annually enrolls about 100 students in science and 100 in the humanities.
The ''normaliens'', as the students of the ENS are known, keep a level of excellence in the various disciplines in which they are trained. Normaliens from France and other European Union countries are considered civil servants in training, and as such paid a monthly salary, in exchange for an agreement to serve France for 10 years, including those of studies. Although it is seldom applied in practice, this exclusivity clause is redeemable (often by the hiring firm).
Apart from the ''normaliens'', ENS also welcomes select foreign students ("international selection"), as well as select students from neighboring universities, to follow the same curriculum along with the reception of a stipend. It also participates in various graduate programs and has extensive research laboratories.
The professors at the ENS are called the "caïmans", and the goldfish in the pond the "Ernests".
The fictitious mathematician Nicolas Bourbaki's "association of collaborators" is based at ENS.

Influence abroad


The Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa was founded in 1810 as a branch of the École normale supérieure and later gained independence.
The ENS group has opened a branch at the ECNU in Shanghai.
The influence abroad of the university can be seen by its positioning in international university rankings. In the 2006 ''THES - QS World University Rankings''[1], the university ranked 18th in the world, and 5th in Europe.[2]

Free online content


Some conferences are in free access on the "Transfer of knowledge" site of the ENS.
About fifty books are in free access on the "Éditions Rue d'Ulm" site, but they are in French.

Notable alumni


''The year when they entered the ENS is in brackets.''

★ Scientists


★ Medicine and biology



Louis Pasteur (1843), chemist and microbiologist, confirmed the germ theory of disease


★ Cognitive Neuroscientists



Stanislas Dehaene (1984) (Current Chair of Experimental Psychology at the Collège de France)


★ Physicists



Marcel Brillouin (1878)



Édouard Branly (1865)



Léon Brillouin



Thomas Fink



Paul Langevin (1894)



Hubert Curien (1945)



Yves Rocard



Jean Baptiste Joseph Fourier



Nobel Prize holders




Claude Cohen-Tannoudji (1953)




Pierre-Gilles de Gennes (1951)




Gabriel Lippmann (1868)




Louis Néel (1924)




Jean-Baptiste Perrin (1891, 1926 Nobel Prize in Physics)




Paul Sabatier (1874)




Alfred Kastler (1921, 1966 Nobel Prize in Physics)


★ Mathematicians



Antoine Augustin Cournot



Évariste Galois (1829) originated Galois theory



Jean Gaston Darboux



Paul Emile Appell (1872)



Jacques Hadamard



Paul Painlevé (1883)



Édouard Lucas



Charles Emile Picard



Élie Cartan (1888)



Émile Borel (1889)



Mihailo Petrović (1890)



Henri Lebesgue



Maurice René Fréchet



Pierre Fatou (1898)



Szolem Mandelbrojt, cofounder of Bourbaki



André Weil (1922), cofounder of Bourbaki



Henri Cartan (1923), cofounder of Bourbaki



Jean Dieudonné (1924), cofounder of Bourbaki



Jacques Herbrand (1925)



Jean Leray (1926)



Claude Chevalley (1926)



Cahit Arf (1932)



Roger Godement (1940)



Adrien Douady (1954)



Fields Medal holders (all French holders of the Fields medal were educated at the École Normale Supérieure)




Laurent Schwartz (1934): 1950 Fields Medalist




Jean-Pierre Serre (1945): 1954 Fields Medalist




René Thom (1943): 1958 Fields Medalist




Alain Connes (1966): 1982 Fields Medalist




Pierre-Louis Lions (1975): 1994 Fields Medalist




Jean-Christophe Yoccoz (1975): 1994 Fields Medalist




Laurent Lafforgue (1986): 2002 Fields Medalist




Wendelin Werner (1987): 2006 Fields Medalist

★ Humanities


★ Philosophers



Henri Bergson (1878) (1927 Nobel Prize in Literature)



Emile Auguste Chartier "Alain" (1889)



Hippolyte Taine (1893)



Viktor Chaim Blerot



Jean Cavaillès (1923) (resistant)



Raymond Aron (1924), political philosopher



Georges Canguilhem (1924), philosopher of science



Jean-Paul Sartre (1924) (declined 1964 Nobel Prize in Literature)



Maurice Merleau-Ponty (1926), phenomenologist



Jean Hyppolite



Simone Weil (1928), philosopher and mystic



Louis Althusser (1939), Marxist philosopher



Michel Foucault (1946), Historian of Systems of Thought



Jacques Derrida (1952), founder of deconstruction.



Étienne Balibar (1960)



André Comte-Sponville (1972)


★ Sociologists (they studied philosophy at ENS)



Emile Durkheim (1879), considered the founder of French sociology



Pierre Bourdieu (1951)



Raymond Boudon


★ Writers (some were philosophers too)



Romain Rolland (1886) (1915 Nobel Prize in Literature)



Charles Péguy (1894), poet



Jean Giraudoux (1903), playwright



Jules Romains (1906), novelist



Paul Nizan (1924)



Paul Bénichou (1927)



Robert Brasillach, novelist, critic and pro-nazi collaborationist



Julien Gracq (1930), novelist and literary critic



Aimé Césaire (1935), poet and politician



Léopold Sédar Senghor, poet and president of Senegal from 1960 to 1980



Assia Djebar (1955), Algerian novelist anf film-malker



Éric-Emmanuel Schmitt (1980)


★ Literary Critics



Jean-Pierre Richard (1941)



Gérard Genette,


★ Historical Sciences



Lucien Febvre (1899), cofounder of the Annales School



Marc Bloch (1904), cofounder of the Annales School



Marcel Granet (1904), sinologist



Georges Dumézil (1916), specialist of Proto-Indo-European society and creator of the trifunctional hypothesis



Neil MacGregor, art historian, Director of the British Museum



Jacques Soustelle (1929), ethnologist



Jacques Le Goff (1945), medievalist



Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie (1949), historian


★ Geography



Paul Vidal de la Blache (1863), considered as the founder of French modern geography


★ Journalists



Pierre Brossolette (1922) (politician and resistant)

★ Economists


Gérard Debreu (1941) 1983 (Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel)

★ Politicians


Jean Jaurès (1878) Socialist leader


Paul Painlevé (1883), mathematician and Prime minister of France in 1917 and 1925


Léon Blum (1890) (expelled during his third year), First Socialist Prime Minister of France in 1936


Édouard Herriot (1891), Prime minister of France in 1924-1925, 1926 and 1932


Georges Pompidou (1931), Prime minister of France from 1962 to 1968 and President of France from 1969 to 1974


Alain Juppé (1964), Prime minister of France from 1995 to 1997


Laurent Fabius (1966), Prime minister of France from 1984 to 1986

★ Business people


Anne Lauvergeon (1978) President of Areva


Jean-Paul Smets (1989) CEO of Nexedi and founder of the ERP5 project

Notable professors



Louis Althusser

Alain Badiou

Samuel Beckett (1969 Nobel Prize in Literature)

Pierre Bonnet

Paul Celan

Victor Cousin

John Coates

Fustel de Coulanges

Jacques Derrida

Alfred Des Cloizeaux

Laurent Freidel

Jacques Lacan

Ernest Lavisse

Alfred Kastler

Thomas MacGreevy

Jacqueline de Romilly

Jean-Pierre Serre

See also







École Polytechnique

École nationale supérieure des mines de Paris

École Centrale Paris

Institut d'Etudes Politiques

External links



ENS Paris

ENS Lettres et Sciences Humaines

References


1. [1] — A 2006 ranking from ''THES - QS'' of the world’s research universities.


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